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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Determination Of Cutpoints For Low And High Number Of Symptoms In Patients With Advanced Cancer, Stephanie Gilbertson-White, B. Aouizerat, T. Jahan, S. Paul, C. West, K. Schumacher, M. Dodd, M. Rabow, A. Abu Raddaha, C. Miaskowski
Determination Of Cutpoints For Low And High Number Of Symptoms In Patients With Advanced Cancer, Stephanie Gilbertson-White, B. Aouizerat, T. Jahan, S. Paul, C. West, K. Schumacher, M. Dodd, M. Rabow, A. Abu Raddaha, C. Miaskowski
Stephanie Gilbertson-White
While patients with advanced cancer experience a wide range of symptoms, no work has been done to determine an optimal cutpoint for a low versus a high number of symptoms. Analytic approaches that established clinically meaningful cutpoints for the severity of cancer pain and fatigue provided the foundation for this study. The purpose of this study was to determine the optimal cutpoint for low and high numbers of symptoms using a range of potential cutpoints and to determine if those cutpoints distinguished between the two symptom groups on demographic and clinical characteristics and depression, anxiety, and quality of life (QOL). …
Documentation On Withdrawal Of Life Support In Adult Patients In The Intensive Care Unit [Corrected] [Published Erratum Appears In Am J Crit Care 2004 Sep;13(5):370], K. Kirchhoff, P. Anumandla, K. Foth, S. Lues, Stephanie Gilbertson-White
Documentation On Withdrawal Of Life Support In Adult Patients In The Intensive Care Unit [Corrected] [Published Erratum Appears In Am J Crit Care 2004 Sep;13(5):370], K. Kirchhoff, P. Anumandla, K. Foth, S. Lues, Stephanie Gilbertson-White
Stephanie Gilbertson-White
BACKGROUND: Patients' charts have been a source of data for retrospective studies of the quality of end-of-life care. In the intensive care unit, most patients die after withdrawal of life support. Chart reviews of this process could be used not only to assess the quality of documentation but also to provide information for quality improvement and research. OBJECTIVE: To assess the documentation of end-of-life care of patients and their families by care providers in the intensive care unit. METHOD: Charts of 50 adult patients who died in the intensive care unit at a large midwestern hospital after initiation of withdrawal …